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Strategies & Market Trends : MDA - Market Direction Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JBH who wrote (82604)1/20/2002 11:16:47 AM
From: Casaubon  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 99985
 
After the market closed, the American Petroleum Institute said crude inventories as of the week ended Jan. 11 rose by 4.1 million barrels. The market expected a drop of as much as 2 million, according to Victor Yu, director of consulting at MV Energy.

Gasoline supplies also rose by 4.2 million barrels, the API said, compared to expectations for a rise of as much as 2 million.

"This is a bearish bonanza," said Phil Flynn, a senior energy analyst at Alaron.com in Chicago, emphasizing that it's bad news for the market investors, but also good news for the consumer.

"The one hope we had the last couple of weeks was good gasoline demand," but that appeared to fall last week, he said. "There doesn't seem to be a lot of hope near-term with these types of numbers."

Hopefully the big sell-off this week somewhat priced in these numbers, he added, but warm weather and slow demand are starting to show up in the numbers.

Still, in the longer term even with the bad news, Flynn said, prices won't likely reach down much below $17 a barrel.

The API also posted a 875,000-barrel decline in distillate inventories, which include heating oil and jet fuel, for the latest week, despite analysts' predictions for a drop of as much as 3 million barrels.

Refinery production capacity fell to 89.4 percent from the prior week's 90.9 percent, according to the API's data.

In after-hours trading shortly after the data were released, February crude fell 54 cents to $18.36 a barrel. February gasoline dropped 1.7 cents to 53.5 cents a gallon and February heating oil declined 0.9 cent to 51.17 cents a gallon.


About the Rydex sentiment data: the nasdaq otc ratio is still 7.2:1. Perhaps we are entering a time when the dart throwers will be right on the short side <ggg>, just as they were once correct on the long side. Perhaps someday the OTC ratio will look more like the S&P fund numbers now (nearly even). Anyway, who is short? I still read mostly people who are buying the dip. Not too many LTBH shorters <ggg> (except Anthony et al). Also, I don't buy into the decelaration argument from the bureau of labor stats, suggesting a diminution in the rate of unemployment implies an end to the recession. We could, just as likely, continue to see a constant bleed down of jobs as the slowdown worms its way through the entire economy. The big picture points to a global recession, IMO. Slower rollout of 3G, slower upgrade cycles for new computer equipment and software. I think there will be plenty of time to enter positions before the market moves. So, take on risk very slowly. If people really believe the market is going to run just buy some stock. I think a low allocation to stocks is prudent. But, always be on the lookout for a gem!



To: JBH who wrote (82604)1/20/2002 3:14:02 PM
From: KymarFye  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99985
 
For bearish sentiment to increase (or to register as HAVING increased) near the bottom of the range is normal. At the same time, amidst options expiration, low pre-Holiday weekend volume, a short-term oversold condition, and conflicting if mainly negative news, a major "statement" session on Friday was not to be expected. Instead, we had a multiply range bound session, with numerous issues putting in narrow range days even amidst a sell-off that, with MSFT doing so much of the heavy pressing and Dell finishing down even despite its positive announcement, may have looked a lot worse than it really was, even if longer-term indications remain negative.

On the major indices, the initial down-move on Friday morning could not break the Wednesday low, with only the Nasdaq Composite managing even a marginal penetration: They had begun to bounce even before Dell's upward revisions, a positive consumer confidence report, and Fed damage control efforts stiffened and even spiked the markets in the morning. On the Composite, the Dell spike turned back precisely at the same congestion area (ca. 1965) established Wednesday, and previously identified as the "initial target" on breakdown from the minor head and shoulders top (the upper portion of the "loveseat" formation). The inability to penetrate this area heading upward left the index with nowhere to go but down: A rupture of the early morning/Wednesday lows led to a probe to the range low (bottom of the lower "head"), but was likewise turned back.

The Nasdaq 100 continues to display significant relative weakness: While the intersection of minor down and uptrend lines caught the initial Wednesday sell-off on the Composite, the NDX fell to intersections of horizontal support and a minor downtrendline. Similarly, the action on Friday fell to the intersection of minor downtrendlines and lower horizontal support, filling and closing within the 11/12 -13 gap whose lower boundary (ca. 1537) would correspond to 1850 on the Composite, and is only 40 points above the last pre-9/11 swing high.

Though the moves below the historical s/r range (ca. 1935 COMPX), below the "last chance" uptrend-line from the Sept. lows, and below the 200 DMAs in all major indices and and almost all major tech sector indices are negatives pointing to longer-term deterioration, to this point they mainly confirm, or over-confirm, the tailing off of the post-September rally into range trading. With next week including a very large number of reports crammed into four days, with the general trend among secondary issues being weighted toward upside "surprises," and with the indices short-term oversold, at support, and having already absorbed initial reactions to reports from, among others, tech heavyweights INTC, MSFT, and SUNW, some short-term retracement of recent losses seems likely. If such a move materializes, initial resistance on on the Composite should come ca. 1950, to be followed by 1965, and then the previously critical gap area ca. 1980-87.

Though all price levels, targets, and intersections can be relevant to day-trading, for wider time frames any strong movement above the 1987 area (or >1605 NDX) would tend to negate the downtrend, and point to a re-test of the upper range boundary, or, at worst, the establishment of a slower, more sustainable downtrend. A lack of any initial upward move or a failure (as opposed to a mere pause) at 1950 COMPX or ca. 1560 NDX, perhaps in conjunction with severe company-specific disappointments or other news reactions, would tend to confirm a continued steep downtrend, raising the probability of unbroken and even accelerating price deterioration both in the short and long term.

Updated version of "loveseat" chart - in green/against white in deference to Bobby's complaints regarding legibility:

home.pacbell.net

Approximately equivalent, if sketchier, NDX:

home.pacbell.net